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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30104426

ABSTRACT

Behavioural and cognitive processes play important roles in mediating an individual's interactions with its environment. Yet, while there is a vast literature on repeatable individual differences in behaviour, relatively little is known about the repeatability of cognitive performance. To further our understanding of the evolution of cognition, we gathered 44 studies on individual performance of 25 species across six animal classes and used meta-analysis to assess whether cognitive performance is repeatable. We compared repeatability (R) in performance (1) on the same task presented at different times (temporal repeatability), and (2) on different tasks that measured the same putative cognitive ability (contextual repeatability). We also addressed whether R estimates were influenced by seven extrinsic factors (moderators): type of cognitive performance measurement, type of cognitive task, delay between tests, origin of the subjects, experimental context, taxonomic class and publication status. We found support for both temporal and contextual repeatability of cognitive performance, with mean R estimates ranging between 0.15 and 0.28. Repeatability estimates were mostly influenced by the type of cognitive performance measures and publication status. Our findings highlight the widespread occurrence of consistent inter-individual variation in cognition across a range of taxa which, like behaviour, may be associated with fitness outcomes.This article is part of the theme issue 'Causes and consequences of individual differences in cognitive abilities'.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal , Biological Variation, Individual , Cognition , Animals
2.
Eur J Neurosci ; 35(5): 682-90, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22300014

ABSTRACT

The antennal lobe (AL) is the first olfactory center of the insect brain and is constituted of different functional units, the glomeruli. In the AL, odors are coded as spatiotemporal patterns of glomerular activity. In honeybees, olfactory learning during early adulthood modifies neural activity in the AL on a long-term scale and also enhances later memory retention. By means of behavioral experiments, we first verified that olfactory learning between the fifth and eighth day of adulthood induces better retention performances at a late adult stage than the same experience acquired before or after this period. We checked that the specificity of memory for the odorants used was improved. We then studied whether such early olfactory learning also induces long-term structural changes in the AL consistent with the formation of long-term olfactory memories. We also measured the volume of 15 identified glomeruli in the ALs of 17-day-old honeybees that either experienced an odor associated with sucrose solution between the fifth and eighth day of adulthood or were left untreated. We found that early olfactory experience induces glomerulus-selective increases in volume that were specific to the learned odor. By comparing our volumetric measures with calcium-imaging recordings from a previous study, performed in 17-day-old bees subjected to the same treatment and experimental conditions, we found that glomeruli that showed structural changes after early learning were those that exhibited a significant increase in neural activity. Our results make evident a correlation between structural and functional changes in the AL following early olfactory learning.


Subject(s)
Bees/growth & development , Learning/physiology , Odorants , Olfactory Pathways/growth & development , Olfactory Perception/physiology , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Arthropod Antennae/growth & development , Brain/growth & development , Insecta
3.
J Neurosci ; 21(16): 6274-82, 2001 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11487650

ABSTRACT

In an attempt to correlate behavioral and neuronal changes, we examined the structural and functional effects of odor exposure in Drosophila. Young adult flies were exposed to a high concentration of the selected odor, usually benzaldehyde or isoamyl acetate, for 4 d and subsequently tested for their olfactory response to a variety of odorants and concentrations. The behavioral response showed specific adaptation to the exposed odor. By contrast, olfactory transduction, as measured in electroantennograms, remained normal. In vivo volume measurements were performed on olfactory glomeruli, the anatomical and functional units involved in odor processing. Pre-exposed flies exhibited volume reduction of certain glomeruli, in an odor-selective manner. Of a sample of eight glomeruli measured, dorsal medial (DM) 2 and ventral (V) were affected by benzaldehyde exposure, whereas DM6 was affected by isoamyl acetate. Estimation of the number of synapses indicates that volume reduction involves synapse loss that can reach 30% in the V glomerulus of flies adapted to benzaldehyde. Additional features of odorant-induced adaptation, including concentration dependence and perdurance, also show correlation, because both effects are elicited by high odor concentrations and are long-lasting (>1 week). Finally, the dunce mutant fails to develop behavioral adaptation as well as morphological changes in the olfactory glomeruli after exposure. These neural changes thus appear to require the cAMP signaling pathway.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Ganglia, Invertebrate/cytology , Ganglia, Invertebrate/physiology , Smell/physiology , Acetates/pharmacology , Adaptation, Physiological/drug effects , Aldehydes/pharmacology , Animals , Behavior, Animal/drug effects , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Benzaldehydes/pharmacology , Butanols/pharmacology , Cell Count , Choice Behavior/drug effects , Choice Behavior/physiology , Cyclic AMP/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drosophila , Electrophysiology , Female , Homozygote , Mutation , Pentanols/pharmacology , Propionates/pharmacology , Sensory Thresholds/physiology , Signal Transduction/physiology , Smell/drug effects , Stimulation, Chemical , Synapses/drug effects , Synapses/ultrastructure
4.
Bull Math Biol ; 62(4): 657-74, 2000 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10938627

ABSTRACT

The processes whereby developing neurones acquire morphological features that are common to entire populations (thereby allowing the definition of neuronal types) are still poorly understood. A mathematical model of neuronal arborizations may be useful to extract basic parameters or organization rules, hence helping to achieve a better understanding of the underlying growth processes. We present a parsimonious statistical model, intended to describe the topological organization of neuritic arborizations with a minimal number of parameters. It is based on a probability of splitting which depends only on the centrifugal order of segments. We compare the predictions made by the model of several topological properties of neurones with the corresponding actual values measured on a sample of honeybee (olfactory) antennal lobe neurones grown in primary culture, described in a previous study. The comparison is performed for three populations of segments corresponding to three neuronal morphological types previously identified and described in this sample. We show that simple assumptions together with the knowledge of a very small number of parameters allow the topological reconstruction of representative (bi-dimensional) biological neurones. We discuss the biological significance (in terms of possible factors involved in the determinism of neuronal types) of both common properties and cell-type specific features, observed on the neurones and predicted by the model.


Subject(s)
Models, Neurological , Models, Statistical , Neurons/cytology , Animals , Bees , Cells, Cultured
5.
J Neurobiol ; 39(4): 461-74, 1999 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10380069

ABSTRACT

The processing of odorant signals is performed, in the olfactory bulb of vertebrates or in the antennal lobe of insects, by different types of neurons which display specific morphological and functional features. The present work characterizes the morphogenesis of the main neuronal types which participate in olfactory discrimination in the adult honeybee (Apis mellifera). Neurons were stained intracellularly with Lucifer yellow at different stages of pupal development and in the adult, and imaged by laser scanning confocal microscopy. Attending to branching patterns, all pupal neurons could be attributed to morphological types previously established in the adult. Given the functional importance of intraglomerular dendritic arbors in the processing of olfactory information, the study focused on their development. The two main classes, dense and sparse intraglomerular arbors, display adultlike features as early as the second day of pupal development. However, morphometric measurements and confocal observations show that their general pattern undergoes continuous maturation processes until late pupal stages and after emergence of the adult. Among these, the results point out a pruning of dendritic branches in sparse arbors, but not in dense arbors.


Subject(s)
Bees/physiology , Dendrites/physiology , Olfactory Receptor Neurons/physiology , Smell/physiology , Age Factors , Animal Structures/cytology , Animal Structures/physiology , Animals , Cell Size/physiology , Microscopy, Confocal , Nervous System/cytology , Neural Pathways , Olfactory Receptor Neurons/cytology , Olfactory Receptor Neurons/ultrastructure , Pupa/physiology
6.
Neuroreport ; 6(1): 214-8, 1994 Dec 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7703419

ABSTRACT

Both intrinsic (programmed) and extrinsic (non-programmed) factors are thought to play a role in the morphogenesis of neurones in the honeybee antennal lobe (the first relay station in the olfactory pathway) during development. We present here a morphometric and statistical analysis of a large population of pupal honeybee antennal lobe neurones grown in primary culture. Quantitative parameters were used to characterize neuronal shapes. On the basis of such morphometric measurements, an automatic classification allowed three morphological types to be distinguished. Their main characteristics are presented and the role of intrinsic and extrinsic factors in their determination is discussed.


Subject(s)
Bees/anatomy & histology , Bees/growth & development , Neurons/classification , Neurons/ultrastructure , Olfactory Pathways/cytology , Pupa/cytology , Animals , Cells, Cultured
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